Some guidance on expediting your order fulfillment process, so you can have more time to make work.
By Rayna HolmesWhen we first published the Anonymous Creative Futures Report, we were excited to bask in what we’d created. Orders came in from local folks and abroad, and we couldn’t wait to get everything out into the world. At the same time, those are the logistics that can cause a bit of dread.
This is common for anyone making work that ends up living beyond their home or studio. It means we also have to figure out how it will travel, but this can feel daunting when we’re trained to think everything after making the work is just “extra.”
With a number of releases under our belt, we’ve learned that the period after a work is complete can be just as rewarding. We feel accomplished and excited by what we’ve made, and we get to customize the experience of how someone else will spend time with it too.
What we’ve also learned is that the best way to keep the fun going is to have a plan, and to create one a little sooner than you think.
When we release work independently, we retain control over things like how creative our packaging is, when and how to talk to our audiences directly, whether to include little notes or whatever feels right alongside the work. We get to create a world around our work that is an equal reflection of us.
Once the Anonymous Creative Futures Report design was finalized and on its way to print, we had our final dimensions and a test print. That meant we knew enough to figure out how to mail it.
Generally flat envelopes and soft mailers are the cheapest thing you can ship, so we used our dimensions and test print to find the right size envelope and the weight of our package overall.
Visualizing our packaging, we also realized it would be a nice moment to share more of the creation story with a Collector’s Note we could print on our regular printer. We also remembered we had a cute address stamp that’d be perfect too.
It ’s easy to get lost in the weeds at this stage because there are so…many…carrier options, and usually their websites are dense and hard to navigate.
Our first point of advice? Go to your local post office and talk to a person. Even when we don’t end up shipping through USPS, being able to talk it through and understand all our options with someone with a soul (rather than gauging our eyes out with the USPS website) has been a life saver.
Our second lifesaver? Using a service like Shippo and Pirate Ship for bulk mailers (Shippo is great for non-bulk too because it’s free with less than 30/orders a month). They take imported csv files and generate shipping labels you can print at home rather than waiting in line at the post office. (Here’s how to generate an order csv on Metalabel). You can see estimated costs for multiple carriers and choose your favorite.
Usually these kinds of services have discounted rates for postage. People always say USPS’s media mail option is the cheapest, but Shippo and Pirate Ship provide other kinds of discounted rates. It’s slightly more than media mail but comes with perks like tracking numbers you can share with collectors and return service if something is up with the destination address. Handy if you have limited inventory or can’t replace orders that may get lost.
The most important piece of this puzzle was figuring out our workflow. We took four steps.